For Sale £2.400.000 - Villa
Selling Price : 2,700,000 Euro
Beachfront Villa on Sovalye Island, Fethiye with 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, infinity pool and access to a private jetty. This magnificent villa on Knight Island has a private pier where you can moor your boat on the side facing Fethiye Bay. There is also a second pier on the west side of the villa where you can swim.
When you enter the single-storey building, a very spacious living room welcomes you. Both bedrooms have a sea view. Master bedroom with en-suite and there is a shared family bathroom on this floor.
In addition, just below the building, there is a third bedroom with an en-suite bathroom, which can be accessed from the outside, and which is also used as a guest room.
In this private villa, quality materials suitable for the island’s architecture have been used with excellent workmanship.
Facilities & Features : Detached Villa , fully furnished , Landscapeg garden , infinity pool with a magnificent panoramic sea view and a sun terrace.
SOVALYE ISLAND (KNIGHTS ISLAND)
15 minutes across the water from the port of Fethiye lies the sleepy island of Sovalye – an island straight out of Swallows and Amazons. Sovalye is entirely pedestrianised with shady walkways through scented pine forests. No traffic means no roads: you cross the land by tracks, beaten or otherwise.
A leisurely walk from end to end takes 45-minute or so, along a coastline dotted with sand and shingle coves. In the crystal-clear water you can make out the ruins of earlier settlements dating back to late Roman times.
Inland, hidden amid the pines and carob trees, are the remains of a crusader castle, built by the Knights of St John after they crossed over from nearby Rhodes. Legend has it that the island became a base in the Middle Ages for renegade knights-turned-pirates.
You can circumnavigate Sovalye by canoe in about an hour or swim in two. The experience is just unique ; paddling or swimming over submerged houses, an old city wall, churches and a Roman cistern that was converted to a chapel during the Byzantine period. Elsewhere, old olive-oil pots and amphorae can be seen scattered across the seabed.